The government is facing an uphill battle to relocate more than 7
million destitute rural residents from inhospitable terrain as part
of its effort to eliminate poverty.
"It's the most difficult job in China's poverty reduction
blueprint," said Lu Feijie, vice-chairman of the State Council
Leading Group for Poverty Alleviation and Development.
He
said that funding for anti-poverty projects will be boosted, while
poor farmers will be given easier access to bank loans.
"Seven million rural residents have to be moved and resettlement
has proven an effective way to get them out of poverty," said
Lu.
Researchers on rural issues said the relocation of needy farmers
would prove a major challenge for the government.
"Resettlement is very complicated," said Jiang Zhongyi, senior
researcher with the Research Center for Rural Economy under the
Ministry of Agriculture.
Some poor residents are not willing to move, said Jiang. "To
persuade them, a lot of work needs to be done."
Other poverty-reduction measures such as family planning should
also be introduced, Jiang suggested.
"In some places, poverty results from less resources but more
people, so we should pay attention to family planning policy after
relocation," said Jiang. "If not, both people who are relocated and
those left behind are likely to sink back into poverty," said
Jiang.
In
the past decade, more than 2.7 million people have moved to new
areas under a government resettlement program. Over 90 percent of
them describe their new life as "satisfactory," according to latest
statistics.
Relocations will be on a voluntary basis, Lu said.
He
added that the government will help those who move to build new
homes and earn a living.
According to the official, it costs 5,000-10,000 yuan
(US$600-US$1,200), to resettle a rural resident. The government
plans to spend 3-5 billion yuan (US$361 million-US$602 million) on
relocation.
Since 1986, China's banks have extended special loans totaling up
to 125 billion yuan (US$15 billion) to poor farmers.
Most provincial governments have developed relocation plans for
needy farmers.
East China's Jiangxi Province will relocate villagers in remote
mountain areas to better-off regions in the next three to five
years, according to a provincial official.
In
Jiangxi, there are 80,000 to 90,000 people living in areas with
harsh natural environments. Most of the villagers have hard lives
and are struggling to escape poverty.
As
a pilot project, around 10,000 rural residents of reservoir areas
and remote mountains in the counties of Xiushui, Wannian and
Suichuan will be moved to more hospitable areas, with each person
receiving a subsidy of 3,000 yuan (US$360).
Since a nationwide campaign to alleviate poverty was launched in
1994, the number of people living below the poverty line in Jiangxi
has declined from 4.5 million to 900,000.
However, there are still many destitute people living in remote
mountainous areas of the province who need more help to improve
their living conditions, the local official said.
(China Daily May 21, 2003)
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